I sent too soon--
I meant to add:
Did this add any color back into the stars?
Colt Bednorz wrote:
Tony,
That makes sense. Is there any visual change after
adjusting the L histogram?
Colt Bednorz
Tony Hallas wrote:
Hello,
I am going to go out on a limb here with something that I chanced upon
this morning... I have been trying to get a really nice output from the
CCD LRGB's. (or they could be from photo origins... it's not going to matter...)
The results looked kind of "plastic"... as in no good.
So the first thing I did was print a pure RGB... it came out beautiful!
You could not tell it came from a CCD source to save your life. Where was
the Luminance messing up the shot? It occurred
to me that I should look carefully at the histograms of both... if the
histograms are a graph of the number of pixels occupying a certain value,
maybe I could learn something from this. There it was... the RGB had most
of the values nicely concentrated in the "middle" of the graph, whereas
the Luminance went from the extreme left to the edge of the right. What
I think was happening was in the LRGB combine, there was no color values
for parts of the Luminance... so it came out looking strange. After stretching
and compressing the two histograms to look almost identical, the resulting
print looked awesome! In fact, it looks like something shot with a much
larger telescope than 14.5"... there is now a color value for every value
of the Luminance... and the print looks "real" instead of "plastic"...
I don't know if there is any merit to this, or if this is a "duh... you
didn't know that???" sort of thing... but it sure helps the quality of
the print.
Tony
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